Swine Flu: At Least 1 Million in Just U.S. Infected; Higher % Being Hospitalized.

Quote from Mvic:

Ian, very sorry for your loss.


Glad you are feeling better ByLo.

We also had it but were expecting to get it and had a supply of tamiflu on hand. My wife and I took the tamiflu the day symptoms showed:fever, wet raspy cough, nausea, and while we felt like crap for several days and those symptoms persisted, especially the nausea and cough and a feeling of fluid build up in the lungs making it hard to breathe, we were not nearly as sick as with the normal flu and both were able to keep working through out (though my wife did get IV fluids at one point). We also took a high dose of cough suppressant and guifennisen (Mucinex DM over the counter med) and my wife took a medrol dose pack as well (steroids) that helped a lot.

Interestingly our child caught a very mild version from us and that could be because the tamiflu also reduces the level of contagion of secretions. She did not take any medicine beyond child Tylenol for 2 days and only had a very mild fever and light wet raspy cough for a few days.

Ahh, your post reminded me that we were also prescribed something to break up the congestion - Entex PSE.

We also had the wet cough but it wasn't severe.
 
Quote from Dr. Zhivodka:

Ian my condolences. Was he Texas boy too? Where was he exposed?
Doc, he was the 2nd person to die with Swine Flu in Alameda County, CA.
The local TV news reported that he had "previous chronic health
problems."
Bullshit. I knew him, and he might have had a hangnail, but that's it.
It started just like ByLo said, scratchy throat, fever, etc.
He went to his Dr. TWICE, and once to the ER cuz it kept getting worse.
No one bothered to Xray his lungs, or test for any flu, period.
They gave him antibiotics for a sinus infection.
The 3rd time he went to his Dr., it was too late. Dr. made him go to ER again, ER Docs admitted him to hospital, Hospital put him on a ventilator and sedated him with Morphine, and 7 days later he died. The Hospital nurses AND Doctors called him their "Mystery Patient", cuz they couldn't figure out what was wrong with him.
God Almighty people, ya'll got advanced degrees dontcha?
His 1, (ONE) test he had for Influenza type A came back negative, so they just gave up on him.
Thru a series of events I'm not privy too, the State got involved and sent fluid and tissue samples off to CDC. Sure enough, CDC called the State back with a confirmed positive result for H1N1.
He was 40, 2 weeks shy of his 41st birthday, a bit overweight, never drank hard liquor, no drug use of any kind, never smoked.

Ya'll wash your hands a lot, use those alcohol moistened towlettes on your buggy at the grocery store, and practice sterile procedure in a public restroom. Wash your hands before you touch yourself, then wash your hands again when you're thru, and use a paper towel to open the door. If there's no trash receptacle near the door, tough shit, throw the paper towel on the floor.
I do.

I"m very happy to read that the others here that contracted this flu strain are happy and healthy today.
You are all very fortunate.
 
Quote from Lucrum:

Are you that short guy in the photo carrying a bag on his back?

Nope.

I'm the guy in the window 20 stories up in that plush flat you can't see, cognac in hand, looking down upon you, in real and symbolic terms.
 
If that's all true I'd be calling a good Malpractice Lawyer.

Quote from IanMacQuaide:

Doc, he was the 2nd person to die with Swine Flu in Alameda County, CA.
The local TV news reported that he had "previous chronic health
problems."
Bullshit. I knew him, and he might have had a hangnail, but that's it.
It started just like ByLo said, scratchy throat, fever, etc.
He went to his Dr. TWICE, and once to the ER cuz it kept getting worse.
No one bothered to Xray his lungs, or test for any flu, period.
They gave him antibiotics for a sinus infection.
The 3rd time he went to his Dr., it was too late. Dr. made him go to ER again, ER Docs admitted him to hospital, Hospital put him on a ventilator and sedated him with Morphine, and 7 days later he died. The Hospital nurses AND Doctors called him their "Mystery Patient", cuz they couldn't figure out what was wrong with him.
God Almighty people, ya'll got advanced degrees dontcha?
His 1, (ONE) test he had for Influenza type A came back negative, so they just gave up on him.
Thru a series of events I'm not privy too, the State got involved and sent fluid and tissue samples off to CDC. Sure enough, CDC called the State back with a confirmed positive result for H1N1.
He was 40, 2 weeks shy of his 41st birthday, a bit overweight, never drank hard liquor, no drug use of any kind, never smoked.

Ya'll wash your hands a lot, use those alcohol moistened towlettes on your buggy at the grocery store, and practice sterile procedure in a public restroom. Wash your hands before you touch yourself, then wash your hands again when you're thru, and use a paper towel to open the door. If there's no trash receptacle near the door, tough shit, throw the paper towel on the floor.
I do.

I"m very happy to read that the others here that contracted this flu strain are happy and healthy today.
You are all very fortunate.
 
Interesting you'd say that Doc.
A certain person who works for a "govt. entity", shall we say, said, to my face, and I quote: "CDC and W.H.O. are clueless about H1N1, and the initial test for Influenza type A isn't trustworthy".
Influenza type A is the over-arching test for H1N1, ("Swine Flu")being a subset of said type A.
So I can't really fault the hospital for their protocol on treatment, however, the initial physician's failure to X-ray (CT scan, what the hell ever) is, to me, a definite catastrophic failure and at least a partial causal factor in the patient's demise.
But that's just mho.
 
buylosellhi, do you know where you caught it? I'm wondering if avoiding crowds would help prevent it...i.e. going to the supermarket when it's not crowded, avoiding public gatherings, sports stadiums, etc.
 
Quote from IanMacQuaide:

Doc, he was the 2nd person to die with Swine Flu in Alameda County, CA.
The local TV news reported that he had "previous chronic health
problems."
Bullshit. I knew him, and he might have had a hangnail, but that's it.
It started just like ByLo said, scratchy throat, fever, etc.
He went to his Dr. TWICE, and once to the ER cuz it kept getting worse.
No one bothered to Xray his lungs, or test for any flu, period.
They gave him antibiotics for a sinus infection.
The 3rd time he went to his Dr., it was too late. Dr. made him go to ER again, ER Docs admitted him to hospital, Hospital put him on a ventilator and sedated him with Morphine, and 7 days later he died. The Hospital nurses AND Doctors called him their "Mystery Patient", cuz they couldn't figure out what was wrong with him.
God Almighty people, ya'll got advanced degrees dontcha?
His 1, (ONE) test he had for Influenza type A came back negative, so they just gave up on him.
Thru a series of events I'm not privy too, the State got involved and sent fluid and tissue samples off to CDC. Sure enough, CDC called the State back with a confirmed positive result for H1N1.
He was 40, 2 weeks shy of his 41st birthday, a bit overweight, never drank hard liquor, no drug use of any kind, never smoked.

Ya'll wash your hands a lot, use those alcohol moistened towlettes on your buggy at the grocery store, and practice sterile procedure in a public restroom. Wash your hands before you touch yourself, then wash your hands again when you're thru, and use a paper towel to open the door. If there's no trash receptacle near the door, tough shit, throw the paper towel on the floor.
I do.

I"m very happy to read that the others here that contracted this flu strain are happy and healthy today.
You are all very fortunate.

Wow, sorry to hear that.
I live in the Bay Area as well.
My condolences.
 
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